| DE20380325 | July, 2005 | |||
| JPEP1458085 | March, 2004 | PWM output driver for two loads | ||
| WO/2005/029707 | March, 2005 | SELF-OSCILLATING A/D-CONVERTER |
The invention relates to a synchronization circuit for synchronizing self-oscillating PWM modulators, particularly for a driver circuit.
FIG. 1A shows a conventional circuit arrangement for producing a pulse-width-modulation signal based on the prior art. The PWM modulation signal is obtained using a comparator by comparing the signal to be modulated with a saw-tooth or triangular signal. FIG. 1B shows the production of a pulse-width-modulated signal through comparison of an analogue input signal with a triangular reference signal. Pulse-width-modulated signals can be amplified particularly efficiently. As FIG. 1A shows, the PWM signal produced is amplified by a power stage and is output at an output A.
As FIG. 2 reveals the amplified pulse-width-modulated signal is then filtered by an out-of-band filter in order to obtain the original analogue input signal and is supplied to an electrodynamic transducer or a loudspeaker, for example.
FIG. 3B shows the signal spectrum for a pulse-width-modulated signal which is produced using a pulse width modulator as shown in FIG. 3A. The pulse width modulator shown in FIG. 3A is the pulse width modulator already described in FIG. 1A, which provides a two-level amplified pulse-width-modulated output signal. As FIG. 3B reveals, the pulse-width-modulated signal produced has many spectral components which are situated around the switching frequency of the pulse width modulator. In order to meet the PSD masking demands of a signaling transmission standard, for example an ADSL standard, the downstream OOB filter A therefore needs to have a relatively steep filter curve in order to reconstruct the analogue signal in the PWM modulator shown in FIG. 3A, as shown in FIG. 3B.
Pulse width modulators of differential design have therefore been proposed, as are shown schematically in FIG. 3C. FIG. 3D shows the associated signal spectrum normalized to the switching frequency of the PWM modulator. As FIG. 3D reveals, the signal spectrum has no signal components in the range of the switching frequency. The downstream OOB filter B can therefore have a less steep filter edge, so that the circuit complexity for implementing the OOB filter is prevented. In practice, this results in the OOB filter's filter order being able to be reduced and the number of LC components being reduced.
FIGS. 4A, 4 B, 4 C are used to illustrate the problem on which the invention is based. A driver circuit of differential design, as shown in FIG. 4A, with two PWM modulators has a perturbing spectral increase, for example in the case of an ADSL signal in the range of a switching frequency of 10 MHz, if the two PWM modulators are not totally in sync with one another. If the two PWM modulators in the signal driver of differential design are not in sync, these spectral noise components can be filtered out only using a technically complex filter, i.e. using a high-order OOB filter. This increases the circuit complexity for the driver circuit.
To synchronize two self-oscillating PWM modulators, a paper from the University of Leuven, SOPA: “A High-Efficiency Line Driver in 0.35 μm CMOS using a Self-Oscillating Power Amplifier”, Proceedings of ISSCC 2001, has proposed the circuit arrangement based on the prior art which is shown in FIG. 5. The driver circuit of differential design which is shown in FIG. 5 contains two PWM modulators arranged in parallel which are supplied with an analogue input signal V IN . The PWM modulators are self-oscillating and have a comparator with a digital buffer which is fed back via a feedback filter to the comparator. The two PWM modulators are of totally analogue design. The feedback filter is designed such that the feedback loop is unstable or oscillates. The outputs of the two PWM modulators are coupled to one another via a capacitor C TANK and via the primary coil of a transformer. The coupling via the capacitor C TANK is strong particularly at higher frequencies, since the impedance of the capacitor moves towards zero at high frequencies. The output-side coupling for synchronization is made only indirectly in the case of the circuit arrangement shown in FIG. 5 and, in particular, is not sufficient to reject spectral components in the frequency range of the switching frequency of the PWM modulators to an adequate degree.
FIG. 6 shows another circuit arrangement based on the prior art which has been proposed in order to synchronize two PWM modulators to one another. The circuit arrangement shown in FIG. 6 is described in published international application for patent No. 2003055060 A1. The two PWM modulators 21 A, B respectively have a signal input for applying an analogue input signal, with the PWM modulator A receiving the analogue input signal V IN inverted by an inverter and the PWM modulator B receiving the uninverted analogue input signal V in . The two PWM modulators A, B are self-oscillating and have an input signal filter B 1 , B 2 which filters a difference signal between the applied input signal and a feedback signal. The synchronization circuit is provided between the output of the input signal filter and the input of a comparator, which compares the difference signal with a reference voltage for producing a comparator output signal. The comparator output signal is amplified by a power stage and is fed back to the input signal filter via an analogue passive feedback filter A. As FIG. 6 reveals, synchronization in the case of the circuit arrangement based on the prior art takes place upstream of the comparator in the forward signal path of the PWM modulator, so that the proportion of nonlinearities in the PWM modulation increases as the coupling or synchronization of the PWM modulators increases.
In the case of the conventional circuit arrangement shown in FIG. 6, mismatches or synchronization errors can be compensated for up to approximately 0.1%. In the case of a greater error or in the case of a greater mismatch between the two PWM modulators, synchronization is not possible.
In one aspect of the invention, a synchronization circuit for synchronizing at least two self-oscillating PWM modulators which output a respective pulse-width-modulated output signal shifts the timings of the signal pulses in the pulse-width-modulated output signals relative to one another such that their signal pulse centers are in sync.
One idea on which the invention is based is, rather than performing synchronization by means of cross-coupling, to reduce the error between the switching signals of the PWM modulation by setting the self-oscillation frequencies of the pulse width modulators to an identical value.
In this case, the PWM modulators are preferably modified such that they have an additional control input which is used to set the oscillation frequency.
In one embodiment of the inventive synchronization circuit, the self-oscillating PWM modulators respectively comprise
In another embodiment of the inventive synchronization circuit, the synchronizing circuit comprises:
In a further embodiment of the inventive synchronization circuit, the synchronizing circuit comprises:
The synchronization circuit may shift the timings of the two pulse-width-modulated output signals relative to one another such that a difference signal between the two pulse-width-modulated output signals has no frequency components in a frequency range of a switching frequency of the self-oscillating PWM modulators.
The first self-oscillating PWM modulator may modulate an analogue input signal and the second PWM modulator may modulate its inverse analogue input signal.
The analogue input signal may be an xDSL signal.
The analogue input signal may be formed by an audio signal.
The two pulse-width-modulated output signals whose timings have been shifted relative to one another may be filtered by a downstream out-of-band filter.
The signal filtered by the out-of-band filter may be output to a two-wire telephone line.
In another aspect of the invention, a method for synchronizing at least two self-oscillating pulse-width-modulated signals, the timings of the signal pulses in the pulse-width-modulated signals are shifted relative to one another such that the synchronization pulse centers of the signal pulses are in sync with one another.
The inventive synchronization circuit may preferably be used in driver circuits which drive signals for a telephone line.
The inventive synchronization circuit is suitable particularly for driver circuits for driving xDSL signals via a two-wire telephone line.
Such a driver circuit for a telephone line may comprise:
The text below describes preferred embodiments of the inventive synchronization circuit and of the inventive method for synchronizing at least two pulse-width-modulated signals with reference to the appended figures in order to explain features which are fundamental to the invention.
FIGS. 1A, 1 B, as discussed above, show the production of a conventional two-level PWM signal.
FIG. 2, as discussed above, is a conventional circuit arrangement with an out-of-band filter for reconstructing a pulse-width-modulated analogue input signal.
FIGS. 3 A, 3 B, 3 C, 3 D, as discussed above, are signal spectra to explain the problems on which the invention is based.
FIGS. 4A, 4 B, 4 C, as discussed above, are a three-level PWM driver circuit with associated signal spectra to explain the problems on which the invention is based.
FIG. 5, as discussed above, is a conventional first synchronization circuit for synchronizing PWM modulators.
FIG. 6, as discussed above, is a conventional second synchronization circuit.
FIG. 7 is an exemplary embodiment of a driver circuit which comprises a synchronization circuit based on the invention.
FIG. 8 is a block diagram of a PWM modulator which can be synchronized by a synchronization circuit based on the invention.
FIG. 9 is an exemplary embodiment of a comparator whose timing can be delayed in an exemplary embodiment of a PWM modulator which can be delayed by the inventive synchronization circuit.
FIG. 10 is a block diagram of an exemplary embodiment of the inventive synchronization circuit for synchronizing two self-oscillating PWM modulators.
FIG. 11 is an exemplary embodiment of a phase detector of the inventive synchronization circuit.
FIG. 12 is a signal diagrams to explain the way in which of the inventive synchronization circuit works.
As FIG. 7 reveals, the inventive synchronization circuit 1 can be used particularly for synchronizing self-oscillating PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B in a driver circuit 3 . The driver circuit 3 shown in FIG. 7 is a driver circuit for driving an output signal for a two-wire telephone line 4 . The driver circuit 3 is an xDSL driver circuit, for example, particularly an ADSL driver circuit. The driver circuit 3 has a signal input 5 for receiving an input signal, particularly an analogue input signal. The analogue input signal is applied via a line 6 to a signal input 7 A of the first PWM modulator 2 A. In addition, the input signal is inverted by an inverter 8 and is supplied via a signal line 9 to a signal input 7 B of the second PWM modulator 2 B. The PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B are self-oscillating PWM modulators which output a pulse-width-modulated output signal via output signal lines 11 A, 11 B to an out-of-band filter 12 via a signal output 10 A, 10 B. Besides the signal input 7 A, 7 B and the signal output 10 A, 10 B, the PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B respectively have, in addition, a control input 13 A, 13 B which receives a synchronization control signal from the inventive synchronization circuit 1 .
The inventive synchronization circuit 1 , as is shown in FIG. 7, essentially comprises a focal-point phase detector (SPPD) 1 A and a downstream loop filter 1 B, which is preferably formed by at least one series-connected integrator. The synchronization circuit 1 preferably has a first signal input 14 A for receiving the first pulse-width-modulated output signal from the first PWM modulator 2 A and a second signal input 14 B for receiving the second pulse-width-modulated output signal from the second self-oscillating PWM modulator 2 B. In addition, the synchronization circuit 1 has a first output 15 A for outputting a first synchronization control signal to the control input 13 A of the first PWM modulator 2 A via a control line 16 A. Furthermore, the synchronization circuit 1 has a second output 15 B for outputting a second synchronization control signal to the control input 13 B of the second PWM modulator 2 B via a control line 16 B.
The out-of-band filter 12 is used to reconstruct the amplified analogue signal from the two pulse-width-modulated output signals from the PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B. In the case of the embodiment shown in FIG. 7, the out-of-band filter 12 in the driver circuit 3 is a fourth-order analogue filter which contains the two coils LA, LB of a common-mode choke and also two capacitor pairs C 1 A, C 1 B and C 2 A, C 2 B. In addition, the leakage inductances of the transformers 17 A, 17 B contribute to the filter response of the out-of-band filter 12 . The primary coils of the transformers 17 A, 17 B are connected to one another by means of a terminating impedance Z T . The secondary coils of the transformers 17 A, 17 B are coupled to one another by means of a terminating capacitor C T . The transformers 17 A, 17 B are connected to a signal output 18 A, 18 B of the driver circuit 3 . The signal output 18 A, 18 B of the driver circuit 7 preferably has a twisted-pair telephone line 4 connected to it.
FIG. 8 shows a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of the PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B contained in the driver circuit 3 . The PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B are respectively self-oscillating PWM modulators which operate at the same switching frequency. The two PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B operate approximately at the same frequency, with an error in the switching frequency being eliminated by the inventive synchronization circuit 1 .
The PWM modulator 2 shown in FIG. 8 has a signal input 7 for receiving an analogue input signal. An input signal filter 2 - 1 filters a difference signal between the analogue input signal and a feedback signal. A downstream comparator 2 - 2 compares the filtered difference signal with a reference voltage to produce a comparator output signal and outputs said signal to a delay circuit 2 - 3 . The delay circuit 2 - 3 delays the timing of the received comparator output signal on the basis of the synchronization control signal CRTL which is applied to a control input 13 of the PWM modulator 2 . a power stage 2 - 4 amplifies the delayed comparator output signal and outputs it as a pulse-width-modulated output signal to a signal output 10 of the PWM modulator 2 . In addition, the PWM modulator 2 contains a feedback filter 2 - 5 which filters the amplified comparator output signal and outputs it as a feedback signal to the input signal filter 2 - 1 .
FIG. 9 shows a preferred embodiment of a comparator 2 - 2 with an integrated delay circuit 2 - 3 . An inverter with an adjustable maximum current is used as a component with a variable time delay for the signal. This controls the total delay for the self-oscillating PWM loop and hence the switching frequency for the PWM modulator. The scope of the time delay is set very accurately by an analogue input variable, for example a voltage or a current. In the case of the embodiment shown in FIG. 9, a bias generator is actuated by a voltage control signal delivered by the synchronization circuit 1 and actuates the gate connections of the MOS field-effect transistors whose timings are of complementary design relative to one another. These two MOS field transistors are respectively connected in series with a field-effect transistor in a CMOS stage which is provided between the output of the comparator 2 - 2 and the inverter.
The time delay for the digital inverter is set or trimmed downstream of the comparator 2 - 2 . An advantage of the implementation shown in FIG. 9 is therefore that the time delay is controlled at an insensitive potential node in the circuit at which the signal amplitude can adopt only two different signal levels or signal values. If the tuning range is large then the time delay can be achieved using a plurality of inverters connected up to one another. In the case of a differential embodiment, an inverter with a differential amplifier is preferably used. A differential embodiment is particularly robust in the face of ambient noise.
FIG. 10 shows a particularly preferred embodiment of the inventive synchronization circuit 1 . The synchronization circuit 1 contains a focal-point phase detector 1 A and a downstream analogue loop filter 1 B which is preferably formed by at least one series-connected integrator. The focal-point phase detector 1 A is preferably formed by two phase detectors PFD. In this case, the first phase detector PFD A is used to ascertain a phase difference between the rising signal edges of the two pulse-width-modulated output signals from the PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B which are applied to the signal inputs 14 A, 14 B. The second phase detector PFD B is provided for ascertaining a negative phase difference between the falling signal edges of the two pulse-width-modulated output signals. In addition, the focal-point phase detector 1 A contains an adder which adds the phase differences ascertained by the phase detectors and outputs them to the downstream loop filter 1 B. The at least one integrator contained in the loop filter integrates the added phase differences in order to produce synchronization control signals CRTLA, CRTLB for actuating the delay circuits 2 - 3 contained in the two self-oscillating PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B. The loop filter 1 B is preferably of differential design.
The synchronization circuit 1 shown in FIG. 10 shifts the timings of the two pulse-width-modulated output signals from the PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B, which are applied to the signal input 14 A, 14 B of the synchronization circuit 1 , relative to one another such that a difference signal between the two pulse-width-modulated output signals has no frequency components in a frequency range of the switching frequency for the self-oscillating PMW modulators 2 A, 2 B. The summed signal which is output by the adder produces a pulse train which approximates the average value zero if the focal-point phase detector 1 A delivers output pulses which are of synchronous orientation relative to one another.
FIG. 11 shows a particularly preferred embodiment of the phase detectors PFD contained in the focal-point phase detector 1 A. The phase detector PFD contains two D-type flip-flops whose data input D receives a constant value and whose data outputs are output to an adder via amplifiers with a gain factor of 1 or −1 in order to produce a phase difference signal. The clock inputs of the two D-type flip-flops respectively receive the two pulse-width-modulated output signals or the inverted pulse-width-modulated output signals. The logic outputs of the D-type flip-flops are logically combined with one another by means of a NAND gate, the output of the NAND gate being connected to a buffer store. The output of the buffer store is connected to a reset or CLR connection of the D-type flip-flops.
FIG. 12 shows signal diagrams to explain the way in which the inventive synchronization circuit 1 works.
FIG. 12A shows two pulse-width-modulated output signals P, N which are output by two unsynchronized PWM modulators based on the prior art. FIG. 12A also shows the difference signal for the two pulse-width-modulated signals. As FIG. 12A reveals, the difference signal receives signal components with the time period of the two PWM-modulated output signals P, N.
FIG. 12B shows synchronization or orientation with a standard phase detector, the rising signal edges of the two PWM signals being in sync with one another. However, the difference signal P-N likewise has signal components at the fundamental frequency or at the basis switching frequency of the two PWM modulators.
FIG. 12C shows two pulse-width-modulated output signals which are in sync with one another with the aid of the inventive synchronization circuit 1 . The inventive synchronization circuit 1 shifts the two pulse-width-modulated output signals P, N from the two PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B such that the signal pulse centers are in sync with one another. As FIG. 12C reveals, the timings of the signal pulse centers of the PWM-modulated signals are in sync with one another, i.e. are at a sync time t S . FIG. 12C shows the associated difference signal P-N. As FIG. 12C reveals, the difference signal has no signal components at the fundamental frequency or basis frequency of the PWM modulated signals P, N. In FIG. 12C, the difference signal P-N has six signal pulses, whereas the difference signal P-N in FIG. 12B has just three signal pulses. The PWM difference signal shown in FIG. 12C therefore has twice the number of pulses, i.e. the frequency of the occurring pulses is twice as high. Since the PWM difference signal shown in FIG. 12C has no spectral components occurring in the range of the switching frequency of the pulse width modulators 2 A, 2 B, it is possible to use an out-of-band filter (OOB) 12 with a smaller filter gradient or a lower filter order. This significantly reduces the circuit complexity for the driver circuit 3 . The inventive synchronization circuit 1 can be used for efficiently synchronizing PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B which are relatively greatly mismatched to one another with little circuit complexity. This allows a significant reduction in the circuit complexity for the downstream out-of-band filter 12 . The error between the two PWM modulators 2 A, 2 B is corrected in this case without any further nonlinear distortions arising.